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The lumen of the rabbit esophagus was perfused in vivo with solutions (one solution per esophagus) containing 0-160 mM HCl by a constant circulation technique for 5 h. During the 1st h, net H+ flux out of the lumen (efflux) was minimal at H+ concentrations of 80 mM or less, but increased linearly with increase in luminal H+ concentrations above 80 mM. After 3 h, the net H+ efflux increased proprtionately to increasing H+ concentrations above a threshold of 20 mM. At the 5th h a linear relationship between net H+ efflux and luminal concentration was seen at all concentrations. Histological damage accompanied increase in H+ efflux and correlated with luminal acid concentrations and duration of exposure. We conclude that the rabbit esophageal mucosa is essentially impermeable to H+ below a threshold concentration of 80 mM for up to 1 h of exposure. When exposure is prolonged, this threshold steadily decreases with time. The occurrence of passive H+ diffusion above threshold concentrations most probably results from an increase in mucosal permeability, possibly an initiating event in the genesis of esophagitis.
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